An Irish landlord who was more ‘old Tory’ than ‘many of his seniors’, O’Brien sat for Northamptonshire North from 1841 until his unexpected death in 1857.
O’Brien was educated at Harrow and graduated from Trinity College, Cambridge in 1832, following which he lived primarily at the family’s Blatherwycke Park estate near Kettering, which had been in the Stafford side of his paternal family since the sixteenth century. He was appointed deputy lieutenant for Northamptonshire in 1834, and had started to attend Conservative meetings for the northern division of the county by at least June 1835.
His candidacy in 1837 for County Limerick was castigated by the Liberal Freeman’s Journal as the ill-judged vanity project of a misguided young gentleman, eager to capitalise on the good will of his father’s tenants in the neighbouring county.
In 1838, O’Brien’s father-in-law’s ill health again led to unsubstantiated rumours that he would stand for Rutland.
During his first parliament, O’Brien attended 46% of recorded divisions, which was well above the 25% average. Aside from an errant vote in the minority in support of effectively abolishing the poor law commissioners, 27 June 1842, he was faithful to the Peelite whip until March 1844. His first recorded parliamentary intervention was over railway standards, 18 June 1842, and days later in The Times he called for national bye-laws to govern the railways.
O’Brien became a leading light in the emerging Protectionist party during 1844, when he opposed the government by adopting a Tory paternalist line over factory regulation and poor law reform, and divided against the Dissenters’ chapels bill and the Maynooth grant. He also started speaking regularly in the Commons in ‘a clear voice’ and with ‘a very distinct delivery’, which was bolstered by his ‘tall and commanding’ presence.
During 1845 he brought in an abortive bill to allow malt to be used duty-free for feeding cattle, 21 May 1845, and told the House that ‘the voice of the Protestantism of England was against the [Maynooth] grant’, 14 Apr. 1845, which he consistently divided against. He acquired public prominence for his principled stand against corn law repeal early in 1846, informing the Commons that ‘we [the Protectionists] may be small in number and uninfluential in debate, but we will raise our voices against the injustice which we may be unable to avert’, 10 Feb. 1846. The speech earned him an illustrated feature in the Illustrated London News, and the guarded praise that, in him ‘the agricultural interest had an advocate with every requisite, except the prospect of success’.
Ahead of the 1847 election, O’Brien secured royal licence to assume the surname of Stafford, in order to avoid being mistaken for his distant relative, who was his former opponent in the 1837 Limerick election and the leader of the Young Ireland movement, William Smith O’Brien (both had regularly been referred to as Mr. S. O’Brien in Hansard during the previous parliament).
Prior to the 1847 election, Stafford had been earmarked as a secretary to the admiralty in a potential ‘country party government’, and in December he was mooted as a potential replacement for Bentinck as leader of the Protectionists. However, he signalled his withdrawal from the leadership through his unwillingness to compromise over Jewish emancipation, 17 Dec. 1847.
Stafford’s major contribution in this parliament came over the Russell government’s 1849 Irish poor relief bill, which The Times dubbed ‘the measure of the session’.
Stafford had been earmarked for the board of trade in a potential Stanley (later Lord Derby) cabinet during 1849, and was rewarded for his loyalty in March 1852, when he was appointed secretary to the admiralty.
As an election had already been called prior to his appointment to the admiralty, Stafford did not have to immediately stand for re-election, and was returned at the general election in a nominal contest. He refused to provide any pledges, but spoke in favour of the Derby’s government’s amended militia bill (which proposed 21 days of service by ballot) and consented on the hustings to consider the gradual widening of the suffrage. Stafford’s distrust of Northumberland increased during the recess after he visited the former Whig first naval lord, James Dundas, in the Mediterranean, who warned him that Northumberland was trying to provoke his resignation.
For Stafford, the 1853 session was consumed with the fallout from his attempts to secure the return of Conservative candidates in dockyard constituencies in 1852. A parliamentary committee declared the election of Conservatives at Chatham and Plymouth void in early 1853, following which the Aberdeen ministry took the opportunity to institute a select committee, which included a merciless Benjamin Hall, to investigate Stafford’s conduct at the admiralty.
When news broke of the poor conditions in the Crimea in October 1854, Stafford took the opportunity ‘to prove his regret’ for the dockyard scandal, by risking ‘his life among those brave men who were suffering contagion and the calamities of war’.
Stafford had returned to England by early 1855 and was present to provide evidence to the Commons during the debate on Roebuck’s motion for a select committee into the condition of the army and the conduct of government operations in the Crimea, which brought down the Aberdeen ministry, 29 Jan. 1855. He resolved to ‘repose the old [army] system’ and spoke at every opportunity in the Commons over conditions in the Crimea before providing extensive evidence of his experiences to the select committee on the army before Sebastapool on 19 Mar. 1855.
Stafford was elected unopposed at the 1857 election, although he did suffer prolonged heckling on the hustings over his role in the 1852 dockyard recruitment scandal.
Following the prorogation of parliament and a visit to Ashridge House, where his dramatic talents provided Disraeli with a rare moment of enjoyment in an otherwise bleak evening of charades, Stafford embarked on his annual visit to Ireland.
